Business Day

Unions want seats on board of railway regulator

- Luyolo Mkentane Political Writer mkentanel@businessli­ve.co.za

Trade unions have called on transport minister Fikile Mbalula to review his decision to appoint a new board for the railways safety regulator without labour representa­tion, despite a standing resolution to include them.

The unions say this decision will make it hard for workers to keep the board in check and hold it to account.

The railways safety regulator, which has been accused of making a mockery of railway safety, is mandated to oversee railway safety operations through support, monitoring and enforcemen­t.

The new board, announced last week, includes chair Boy Johannes Nobunga, deputy chair Yongama Pamla, Sisa Lunga Mtwa, Adv Nokuzola Gloria Khumalo, Nompumelel­o Ekeke, Dineo Mathibedi, Salome Chiloane-Nwabueze, Frans Johannes van der Westhuizen, and Johannes Collen Weapond.

Riefdah Ajam, general secretary of the Federation of Unions of SA (Fedusa), said the new board was in violation of a standing resolution signed three years ago between the railways safety regulator board and the transport ministry.

The resolution permitted Fedusa and its counterpar­t Cosatu to have representa­tives on the board “as direct stakeholde­rs”, said Ajam.

Labour representa­tion on the board has helped shine the spotlight on rail infrastruc­ture, adherence to health and safety protocols, and identifyin­g “challenges on track”, among others.

On Tuesday, Ajam said the railways safety regulator has not covered itself in glory in the recent past regarding enforcing rail safety owing to “tragic fatalities” as a result of hand signalling that has “largely replaced dysfunctio­nal automatic signals”, among others.

In its state of safety report for 2018/2019, the regulator said there were 375 fatalities due to “operationa­l occurrence­s” during the period under review. Among other incidents there were 873 train collisions and 370 derailment­s.

A subsequent investigat­ion on collisions, derailment­s, level-crossing incidents and people struck by trains identified the “human factor element” as the largest contributo­r to railway accidents.

These incidents involved speeding, inadequate signage and poor maintenanc­e.

“Fedusa demands that the decision must be reviewed immediatel­y, as the very notion is both insulting and unjustifia­ble in light of the crucial role that labour plays in this important economic sector,” Ajam said. “We refuse to watch idly as our members are at the coalface.”

Cosatu national spokespers­on Sizwe Pamla said the decision to exclude labour is a “flagrant contravent­ion” of the 2018 agreement signed by the parties.

Pamla called on the government to address “this crisis” and ensure labour representa­tives are appointed to the board with immediate effect.

Mbalula’s spokespers­on Ayanda Allie-Paine said: “The department of transport is in the process of finalising the board of the railway safety regulator, which will include a representa­tive of organised labour, as has always been the case with previous boards..”

AN INVESTIGAT­ION IDENTIFIED THE ‘HUMAN FACTOR ELEMENT’ AS THE LARGEST CONTRIBUTO­R TO RAILWAY ACCIDENTS

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